Mellin et al 2016 Nat Com.pdf (12.5 MB)
Download fileHumans and seasonal climate variability threaten large-bodied coral reef fish with small ranges
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-18, 16:38 authored by Mellin, C, Mouillot, C, Kulbicki, M, McClanahan, TR, Vigliola, L, Bradshaw, CJA, Brainard, RE, Chabanet, P, Graham EdgarGraham Edgar, Fordham, DA, Friedlander, AM, Parravicini, V, Sequeria, AMM, Richard Stuart-SmithRichard Stuart-Smith, Wantiez, L, Caley, MJCoral reefs are among the most species-rich and threatened ecosystems on Earth, yet the extent to which human stressors determine species occurrences, compared with biogeography or environmental conditions, remains largely unknown. With ever-increasing human-mediated disturbances on these ecosystems, an important question is not only how many species can inhabit local communities, but also which biological traits determine species that can persist (or not) above particular disturbance thresholds. Here we show that human pressure and seasonal climate variability are disproportionately and negatively associated with the occurrence of large-bodied and geographically small-ranging fishes within local coral reef communities. These species are 67% less likely to occur where human impact and temperature seasonality exceed critical thresholds, such as in the marine biodiversity hotspot: the Coral Triangle. Our results identify the most sensitive species and critical thresholds of human and climatic stressors, providing opportunity for targeted conservation intervention to prevent local extinctions.
Funding
Department of Environment and Energy (Cwth)
History
Publication title
Nature CommunicationsVolume
7Article number
10491Number
10491Pagination
1-9ISSN
2041-1723Department/School
Institute for Marine and Antarctic StudiesPublisher
Nature Publishing GroupPlace of publication
United KingdomRights statement
© 2016 Macmillan Publishers Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Repository Status
- Open